The Wiig Assessment of Basic Concepts (WABC) is a unique, norm-referenced assessment that evaluates a child's understanding and use of basic concepts.

Use the WABC to:

Create focused IEPs and intervention plans.

Thoroughly assess basic concepts.

Identify children in preschool and kindergarten who need "extra help" with basic concepts.

Distinguish deficits in using basic concepts from deficits in understanding them.

Further distinguish an inability to understand basic concept terms from deficits in auditory processing (following directions).

What Makes the WABC Different?

There is no easel. Instead, the test presents an interactive storybook format. This gives you the opportunity to test the child in a setting that is quite natural to most children (looking at/reading a book).

The WABC embeds concept pairs or related words in colorfully illustrated scenes. Instead of presenting each concept as an unrelated single word, the WABC assesses one of the concepts in a pair receptively (Which bear is big? Child points to big bear) and the other expressively (You showed me big. This bear is…Child says, "little." )

The WABC contains two age-level tests. Level 1 – A Day at the Zoo is for preschool children ages 2;6 to 5;11 years, and Level 2 – A Day at the Park is for children in kindergarten and early elementary grades ages 5;0 to 7;11 years. For a more complete picture of strengths and weaknesses, you may administer BOTH levels to children between 5;0 and 5;11 years.

What is the WABC Response Analyzer?

Enter data from a child's record form(s) and the WABC Qualitative Response Analyzer will automatically generate a summary of the basic concepts that the child identified correctly. The Response Analyzer will not calculate normative data (standard scores, etc). It produces qualitative reports to help create intervention goals. WABC Response Analyzer.

Early childhood educators, special educators, and speech-language pathologists can administer the WABC. However, we recommend that only educators and professionals skilled in test administration and scoring interpret the results and create intervention plans for students.

Valid and Reliable

The WABC is a valid and reliable assessment instrument. For the standardization, the population sample included 1200 children across the United States and closely resembles 2000 US Census data. Test-Retest correlations were very good with r = .93 for Level 1 Total Score and r = .92 for Level 2 Total Score. Inter-rater reliability was also high with an Alpha of .99. In comparing the WABC to the Boehm-3 Preschool and the Boehm-3, we found that both tests examine similar skills (Level 1 Total Raw Scores, Pearson's r = .69 and Level 2 Total Raw Scores, Pearson's r = .74).